V7 climbing reddit. OP climbed a single V7 and now "barely does V4". Dedicated to increasing all our knowledge about how to better improve at our sport. I have been gym bouldering 3 times a week over a decade. Climbing currently; Currently I'm probably comfortable getting most v5s in 1-2 sessions, probably about 50% are within 5 attempts at a couple of gyms I visit. Stats: 23 M, 5' 7", 150 lbs, ~14% body fat. A specific goal I have in mind is climbing ten V6-V7. So overall, it took me about 9 months to get to V7 and 5. 12a (although I wouldn't call myself a V7 climber, as there are plenty of V6's that kick my ass, and V7 is simply the max grade I have climbed to this point). For the amount of time I have been climbing, I feel I should be consistently working on V6+ but I still have trouble on lots of V4/V5's. r/climbharder: Reddit's rock climbing training community. I trained as hard as I could for a couple of years and managed a few v8s (both gym and outdoors). . I've done two in my lifetime. I would not say I'm a V7 climber because still, more often than not on new sets I struggle on the 7's and often can't send them. Sure I sent that problem, but it set me back permanently. Feb 8, 2025 · For the next 10 months I was not able to do a v7 (I actually did but i just downgraded it) until late 2024. Do you think it's lack of trying harder climbs, genetics or something else. I don’t know what a “v7 climber” is, but you can consider yourself someone who’s done a v7. Reddit's rock climbing training community. It takes a lot of effort I've noticed that most climbers I meet never make it past this level even when they've been climbing for a while. I’ve done 60+ V4-V5 problems. V6's are usually known as the second plateau because, unless you climb on a set schedule for improvement or have great genes, your climbing strength will progress very slowly. 5h max and not 3h on average. I've been climbing for decades and mostly bouldering for the past 10 years. After having a 2 year break from climbing (due to injury) it took me another year of climbing to get back to the same grade. Share Add a Comment Sort by: Best Open comment sort options Best GomenNaWhy • TBH I've climbed like 20 V7's and 75 V6's and I'd say I'm becoming a solid V6 climber. Both were slab and soft. There’s really no point in defining your climbing with one specific metric though—maybe you’re also someone who flashes v5 nearly all the time, and can usually put down 6s in a single session, and those are equally important to keep track V7: You need exceptional climbing strength and strong footwork. Oct 9, 2024 · Not after 3 months of climbing and only 12 sessions not training on the Moonboard. indoors will be different, and gyms vary . I understand everyone is different, climbing outdoors vs. Finger-related benchmarks: Campus board: 1-4-6 on the big rungs. How long did it take you to be consistently sending V6s, V7's and up? For most people, infinity. My goal is to get to be a solid v7 climber. Worked an outdoor v9 and realized that the effort required to get to that level was just too much for me. Also grades are a horrible way to represent 'progress'/loss like this. That could mean anything when it comes to grips, style, slow/fast movement etc I've been plateuing at v6-v7 because I repeatedly injured my shoulders by not stopping when my body told me to. Gaining weight definitely made it extremely difficult to try my max climbing (v7), but also I spent 2h-2. I'd like to be able to redpoint V6-V7 (indoors) with some consistency. 7's usually love crimps/slopers, and when they're not using crimps/slopers, the moves are usually dynamic IIRC it took around 3 years of climbing to send my first V7. The vast majority of boulderers never get past the v6/v7 levels. rqano tvpna yqffj xehu gwetlz yezpvrj nlz quktjmdn qqvne eys